Judgment:
C.K. Thakker, J.
The present appeal
is filed by the appellant against the judgment and order passed by the
Division Bench of the High Court of Patna on August 13, 1989 by which it
dismissed the Letters Patent Appeal No. 1177 of 1998 and confirmed the
order passed by a Single Judge on September 24, 1998 in Civil Writ
Jurisdiction Case No. 3008 of 1998.Brief facts of the case leading to
the present appeal are that a return was filed by the landholder under
the Bihar Land Reforms (Fixation of Ceiling Area and Acquisition of
Surplus Land) Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as 'the Act'). It was
alleged that the landholder possessed excess land. A draft statement
under Section 10 was issued by the Collector under the Act. The
landholder objected to the proceedings and asserted that he did not
possess land in excess of ceiling area. An enquiry was made and
verification reports were submitted by the Circle Officers (Anchal
Adhikaris). The Deputy Collector, Land Reforms, (DCLR) Samastipur, vide
his order dated January 07, 1976 upheld the objection of the landholder
and recorded a finding that the landholder did not possess surplus land
and the proceedings were required to be dropped.
The case was
accordingly disposed of. No appeal was filed against the said decision
and it had become final. No 'final statement', as required under Section
11 of the Act, however, was issued or published by the authority. The
Act was amended in April, 1981 (Bihar Act 55 of 1982) and after Section
32, Sections 32A & 32B came to be inserted. Whereas Section 32A provided
for abatement of appeal, revision, review and reference, Section 32B
permitted initiation of fresh proceedings in certain cases. In the
present case, as already noted earlier, no final statement under Section
11 was issued. It appears that one Hridya Narayan Yadav, Secretary,
Kisan Sabha Darbhanga-cum-Member, Darbhanga District Committee, Bhartiya
Communist Party (Marxist), Darbhanga moved an application in the Court
of Additional Collector, Land Ceiling, Darbhanga along with an affidavit
alleging therein that the landholder had more lands than prescribed
under the Ceiling Act, but correct facts were not disclosed when the
return was filed under the Act by the landholder in 1973-74. Fresh
proceedings were, therefore, initiated in the year 1993 in Land Ceiling
Case No. 65 of 1992-93 and statement of landholder was recorded. The
Additional Collector, after considering the objection of the landholder
and referring to details furnished by Circle Officers held that the
landholder possessed 96.40 acres of land. He was entitled to only one
unit. Thus, he could retain only 25 acres of Category III land and the
remaining land of 71.40 acres was required to be declared surplus. An
order was passed to that effect. A direction was also given to take
appropriate steps for issuance of final statement under Section 11 of
the Act.The appellant preferred an appeal against the said order before
the Collector under Section 30 of the Act. It was, inter alia, contended
that the order dated January 7, 1976 declaring that the landholder did
not possess excess land, had not been challenged and attained finality.
The notification and final statement which was required to be issued
under Section 11 of the Act had not been issued by the authorities.
Non-issuance of final statement cannot adversely affect the landholder.
It was also submitted that the Ceiling Case was of 1973-1974. It was
over in 1976 and it cannot now be reopened. It was also urged that
Section 32B came to be inserted only in 1981, but before that final
order was passed in 1976. No fresh proceedings thus could be initiated
under the Amendment Act of 1982. It was, therefore, submitted that the
order passed by the District Collector was liable to be set aside.
The Collector,
however, by an order dated June 2, 1997 dismissed the appeal and
confirmed the order passed by the Additional Collector, Darbhanga and
observed that the landholder was in possession of excess land. The
landholder approached the Board of Revenue by filing a Revision Petition
under Section 32 of the Act which was also dismissed by the Member,
Board of Revenue, Bihar vide his order dated January 13, 1998.
The aggrieved
landholder then instituted a writ petition before the High Court of
Patna. A counter affidavit was filed on behalf of the respondent-State
in which a stand was taken that Land Ceiling Case No. 65 of 1992-93 was
in fact renumbered of the old case and proceedings were started afresh
in exercise of power under Section 32B of the Act and such a course was
permissible in the light of the fact that after the order was passed on
January 7, 1976, no final statement was issued under Section 11 of the
Act. Initiation of fresh proceedings was, therefore, permissible and the
order passed by the Additional Collector, Darbhanga and Collector,
Darbhanga could not be said to be unlawful.
The learned Single
Judge noted that though the order was passed in 1976, no final
notification under Section 11(1) of the Act was issued prior to April 9,
1981 when the Act was amended and Sections 32A and 32B were added. In
the circumstances, observed the learned Single Judge, initiation of
fresh proceedings was permissible and the order passed in those
proceedings could not be objected. The writ petition was, therefore,
dismissed. The Division Bench in Letters Patent Appeal confirmed the
order of the learned Single Judge. The said order has been challenged in
this Court.
On February 4, 2000,
notice was issued by this Court and ad-interim relief was granted. The
matter was thereafter adjourned from time to time. On December 11, 2000,
leave was granted. The matter has now been placed before us for final
hearing.
The learned counsel
for the appellant contended that the proceedings had been concluded and
final order was passed under the Act as early as on January 7, 1976 and
that order had become final. Nobody had challenged it. Legality of that
order could not be subsequently considered by initiating fresh
proceedings. It was incumbent on the authority to take consequential
action of issuance of final statement under sub-section (1) of Section
11 of the Act immediately after the order was passed, but it was not
done. There was thus failure to discharge statutory duty by the
authorities which cannot adversely or prejudicially affect the interest
of the landholder. It was also submitted that there was no question of
application of Section 32B of the Act which was added only in April,
1981. Fresh proceedings initiated in 1992-93, therefore, were without
jurisdiction and all actions taken in those proceedings are liable to be
set aside. It was further submitted that it was due to mala fide act by
Hridya Narain Yadav that proceedings were started in 1992-93. According
to the learned counsel, neither the authorities nor the High Court
considered the provisions of law and the orders are contrary to law.
The learned counsel
for the respondent-authorities supported the orders and submitted that
they were right in holding that since no final notification under
Section 11(1) was issued, the proceedings could not be said to have been
concluded and in view of amendment in 1981, action could be taken under
Section 32B of the Act and appellant had no right to make grievance
against it.
Having considered
the rival submissions of the learned counsel for the parties, in our
opinion, the appeal deserves to be partly allowed. So far as the
contention of the appellant that the proceedings had been initiated in
1973-74 and final order was passed on January 7, 1976 is not disputed
and cannot be disputed. If it is so, submission of the appellant is well
founded that final statement as required by sub-section (1) of Section
11 ought to have been issued and effect ought to have been given to the
final order. Admittedly, no appeal was filed. Nor the order was
challenged by any party. The appellant is right in contending that final
statement ought to have been issued immediately or in any case within
'reasonable time'. The authority cannot neglect to do that which the law
mandates and requires doing. By not issuing consequential final
statement under Section 11(1) of the Act, the authority had failed to
discharge its statutory duty. Obviously, therefore, the appellant is
justified in urging that such default in discharge of statutory duty by
the respondents under the Act cannot prejudice him. To that extent,
therefore, the grievance of the appellant is well-founded.
The appellant is
also right in contending before this Court that the power under Section
32B of the Act to initiate fresh proceedings could not have been
exercised. Admittedly, Section 32B came on the statute book by Bihar Act
55 of 1982. The case of the appellant was over much prior to the
amendment of the Act and insertion of Section 32B. The appellant,
therefore, is right in contending that the authorities cannot be allowed
to take undue advantage of its own default in failure to act in
accordance with law and initiate fresh proceedings.
In this connection,
our attention has been invited by the learned counsel for the appellant
to a decision of this Court in Mrutunjay Pani & Another v. Narmada Bala
Sasmal & Another, AIR 1961 SC 1353, wherein it was held by this Court
that where an obligation is cast on a party and he commits a breach of
such obligation, he cannot be permitted to take advantage of such
situation. This is based on the Latin maxim 'Commodum ex injuria sua
nemo habere debet' (No party can take undue advantage of his own wrong).
In Union of India
& Ors. v. Major General Madan Lal Yadav (Retd.), (1996) 4 SCC 127,
the accused-army personnel himself was responsible for delay as he
escaped from detention. Then he raised an objection against initiation
of proceedings on the ground that such proceedings ought to have been
initiated within six months under the Army Act, 1950. Referring to the
above maxim, this Court held that the accused could not take undue
advantage of his own wrong. Considering the relevant provisions of the
Act, the Court held that presence of the accused was an essential
condition for the commencement of trial and when the accused did not
make himself available, he could not be allowed to raise a contention
that proceedings were time-barred. This Court referred to Broom's Legal
Maxims (10th Edn.) p. 191 wherein it was stated;
" it is a maxim of
law, recognised and established, that no man shall take advantage of his
own wrong; and this maxim, which is based on elementary principles, is
fully recognised in Courts of law and of equity, and, indeed, admits of
illustration from every branch of legal procedure".
It is settled
principle of law that a man cannot be permitted to take undue and unfair
advantage of his own wrong to gain favourable interpretation of law. It
is sound principle that he who prevents a thing from being done shall
not avail himself of the non-performance he has occasioned. To put it
differently, "a wrong doer ought not to be permitted to make a profit
out of his own wrong".
In view of the
findings recorded by us hereinabove, we would have allowed the appeal in
its entirety and would have quashed the proceedings initiated in 1992-93
by setting aside all orders passed in such proceedings. It, however,
appears that an application was made by Hridya Narain Yadav, in which it
was stated that the landholder had not disclosed full and correct facts
in his return. Certain lands belonged to him and located in District of
Darbhanga were not shown in the earlier proceedings. In other words, the
allegation was that the landholder had played fraud upon the authorities
and on the statute by not furnishing true and full facts as to the land
possessed by him. If it is so, irrespective of statutory provisions, an
appropriate action can be taken. Though the question was raised before
the statutory authorities under the Act, the High Court (learned Single
Judge as also the Division Bench) had decided the case only on the basis
of Section 32B of the Act which could not have been done. In view of our
findings as to non-applicability of Section 32B to the case on hand, we
consider it appropriate to remit the matter to the Division Bench of the
High Court to decide it afresh under the law as it stood prior to
amendment by Bihar Act 55 of 1982. At the same time, however, the High
Court will consider the case as to whether all requisite facts had been
disclosed by the landholder when he filed return in 1973-74 or there was
non-disclosure of certain lands. The Division Bench of the High Court
will finally decide the matter after affording opportunity to all the
parties. Let such a decision be taken as expeditiously as possible,
preferably within six months from the receipt of the order of this
Court.
For the foregoing
reasons, the appeal is partly allowed to the extent indicated
hereinabove. The matter is remitted to the High Court to decide it
afresh in accordance with law. In the facts and circumstances of the
case, there shall be no order as to costs.
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